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THE HERALDg RY THURSDAY MORNING, I n o,At Newberry, S. C.BY THO9. F. GRENEKER,Editor and Proprietor.Ter:As, S2.oo per .Jnmu,kSpeeialanartractotes expiraarien odvubInvariably in Advance. A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture Markets, &cairne for which it is paid.-- O>ark denotes x oOsub Vol. XvIII. NEWBERRY, S. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1882. No. 38ber o i t inWatches, Clocks, Jewelry.1T 1T IIE AND JE\IELRYAt the New Store on Hotel Lot.I have now ai band a large and elegantassortment of -WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,Silver and Plated Ware,V10 JN AND GUIMAE STBI-G1S,It PECTACLES AND SPECTACLF ,CAMS,WEDDINS AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS.1 xDLsS fASIaTY.All orders by mail prouiptly attended to.Watchmaking acd Repairiag[crse Cheaply and with Dispatch.Call and eameine my stock and prices.EDUARD SCHOLTZ.Nov. 21, 47-tf.- .TMiscelaueouss. .PMEAIN UIEITYGREENVILLE, S. C."The aert Session will begin SEPTEMBER20th, 1882.sxtPaSES.Academic Department.......$20 to $25Coliegiate .:,.;,,, $30 to $40Per Term.For fall information, apply for Circularto C. MANLY, President.Or to Paop. H. T. OOOK, Secretary.Aug 1. 3.5-1m.DUE WE.TFEMALE COLLEGE,ABBEVILLE 0O., I. C. 1Exercises open Oct. 2nd. Whole expse,Board and regular Tuition, including$162 for the year. French spoken- in classand dining room. Special attention to Music, Drawing, and Paint Apply for cat.alogue. J. P. KE.NDY, President.Sep. 7,36-3t.S8VIH CARONA COLLEGEWILL OPEN OCTORNE 3d, 1, 2.-Courses of Study-General Science,Mechanics and Engineering, Agriculture,-Classical Course, Latin Course.Partial Courses, in English Studies,Practical Mathematics, Practical Agriculture.Students admitted to any Course forshich they are prepared.Tuition Free,Annual Fee of $10 for repairs. Board.in private families, from $12 to $15 amonth. Excellent board in messes at from$S to $10. Entire expenses need not exceed $125 ; ought not to exceed $175.For further information, addressBENJAMIN SLOAN,Sec'y of Faculty,Aug. 24, 84-1m: Columbia, S. C.iEWBlRtY tJOLLGB.The next Session opens MONDAY, OCT._:. 2,1 1882.Tuition for nine months, $25 to $57, according to class.Entire expense including tuition, board,&c., $150.00 to $175.00.Address, REV. G. W. HOLLAND,Aug. 24, 34-6. President.VALUABLE PLACEFOR SALE.on dyo se. tpiaesl,alta rcme as ~LEN Trustee.Inosodone, I.ilAelttornaeysubi otr at NeLw ,rN.H.EW.,toteRhgesRie, on Sa. eda i pracier ntherm Stae nownederl Gu . W. G.N True, &c-6.Ele T.c.BTE.n iNST O eRr.Wtor neysth at haeee ben aw,iiediNewberry, ar nehbto. AnC.ilit there silolyu prictreSat ande toed-ueayou hts.Ag delay aedageru.goEetio isaOverMr. go and Clar hets cont fer anpWoduce ta claseo ewerk benhbte iesther efr you picture, nargin touanWewared youe hadls redngerouth:" ~~~Mrle. WHCa e elo dn,'feraFoprisene ait of rk, hafehe cantrde acas of thsoapr CLA BilRpleSeCon ld pihurssnd Maringtoany dei lt re Sieve also rens.o hsmals. Ra spec aclngerHoeBorstyl n quality of workin, referitoine etor y othper.es shor BotS.And hs iin LaeLahneryOire Cos, Zior Oilersan ScreWenh.,Bc l oest maliy rertesn, 2ato6nJun.1. 2-4t S. P. BOOZER'SJun.1. 2-4t Hardware Store.FARMERSGrowing Sugar Cane and in need ofCANE MILLS AND EVAPORATORS,will find it to their interest to eall on methefore making purchases, as I am sgent for)ne of the cheapest and best Factories in'he counLry.S. P. BOOZER.'4u1y 19. 29-4L.sttgg.THE OPEN WINDlOW.The old hose by the linden.Stood sialet in the shade,And on the graveled pathwayThe light and shadow played.I saw the narsery windowsWide opes to the air;$tic te t pppt Je children,They.ur, up 1ager ;r1,The t;g a pwfogndl}n44o9V! 4gjWas standing by the door;He looked fur his litile playmates,Who weuld. mtrn no more.They walked not under the lindens,They played not in the ball;but shadow and silence and sadnessWere halaging over all.The birds aang In the brancheeWith sweet, familiar $one;Bat the voices of the childrenWill be heard in dreams alone?And the boy tbat walked beside me,He could not us4d;yWhy closer In mine, abi closel,I pressed his warm, soft hand!Fon Tas HaLD.JJTTEg FROM COLORADO.spec:al Copresp}de#o9.CANoN CITY, COM., Sept. 2, 1882.It is impossible in a single letterto describe the scenery of theArkansas Valley from Leadvilleto Canop Qjy, a distance of 130miles. Four years #gp J. tfYv=eled it by stage, and I thoughkthe road one of the wildest andmost picturesque I had ever passedover. It was a little earlier inthe spon than this, and thatyear there wpa ??ph R9Pa p ypWin the mountains than ther,e, isnow. All day long the snow-covered peaks of the Sagnach range,which constitutes the great continept i divide, loomed up beforene, towering Jpwvp Op y*lley onthe right, and 1?,NQ feet abospthe level of the sea. Mounts El.bert and Masive and Harvard,Princeton, and Yale are the bestknown polf;, k}6 there are othersequally imposiig. .e pg,gp ppthe east was also snow-espped,and much of the way so near theriver that, its granite crags seemed almost to overhang the stream.Sometimes the roi lies downnear the Arkansas, whose bright,clear waters dash over the boulders on its bottom or curl ingraceful eddies arognd somecurve. Again the road ascendsthe bank, the six strong horsesstraining every muscle to haul theheavy coach up the rocky steep,and then you look down 500 feetto see tbe river surging and raging leaping from~ le4ge to ledge,and dashing against, the sides ofthe rocky canon. Occasionallythe road brought -up upon abroad level plateau, bounded ontbe east by the canon-of tbe river,which flows hundreds of feet belowat, the very foot of the mountains,and extending away for miles tothe west and south. This wasonce the bed of the Arkansas,which, in olden times, spread outhere into a broad lake before itcut its present channel throughthe rocks. AL places the riverflows up close to the foot-hills ofthe mais-range. and then the roadwhich follows is extremely hillyand winding.But now the iron horse hasfound his way up this valley andall this scenery is as accessible asthat of the Hudson River or theWhite Monut.ains, though I some.times think the old stage furnishesthe most exciting and enjoyablemeans of getting over thesemountains and up aind down thevalleys. I never enjoyed any railway ride and never expect to enjoy one as much as I did the stageride from Black Hawk to CentralCity in 1875, passing over themountain doan which NellieGrant made her famous driveshortly before and over the hairraising road which started pourold Horace Greely in 1869. Butno regular stage runs over thisroute now, because the railwayhas crept up here, too. There isno more striking.evidence of tbeprosperity and enterprise of Colorado than. the rapidity withwhich narrow gauge railroads arebuilt into the Rocky Mountains.Tbe Denver, South Park and Paeifia road zig zags up the SouthPlatte canon and over the passinto the South Park on gradesthat no engineer could have daredto suggest ten years ago. Scarcelyless daring has been the engineering of.the Denver and Rio Granderoad over the La Veta pass of theSangre de Chr:sto range into theralley of the Rio Grande River.More wondertul than either in itsaonception and execution hasOpp th construction of the Arj*ups Valley Railrag rogp tgplace throygh the goyal fegs,s canon almost as grand in itsproportions and more inaccessiblethan that of the Colorado. ThisRoyal George, through which theArkansas River cuts its way tot4s plips, is indeed a seven dayswonder. The fantastipformso whickthe red granite assumes, the overhanging crags, the almost perpendicular walls, the sudden turnsjp t4A *tream which shut out thelistant view in aui directiQpp 4P0iave the traveler In a great well-all these might be described,but must be' seen to be appre:iated.On the road from Leadville wepass the Twin Lakes, always appgl#r rppprt but now fast beoming a city of .stPFp Feoiices- TJey are two pretty litle water bodies. aud the place isvery invitring. This- reminds mef oneof the wonders of Colorado1"rhioh I have heard but havenot:seeg-. it. Re gpr rangeroin. Twin Lakes and is, it Jheruth be -told,. ,i ten-acre fieldwhieb is no more nor less than aiubterranean lake covered withoil about eighteen inches deep.2n the ppll i#, or lig lpt yp phey say, cultivated a field of corn,which produced thirty or fortybushels to the acre. If any onewill take the troubie to dig a bole,he depth of a spade-handle hewill ipd it o 4l with water, andy using a hook and line, kishour or five inches long can beaught. These fish have neithercales nor eyes, and are perch-iken shape. The ground is a blackmarl.inaitaAprp,ggjp a1! robbility -was - at one time an openody of water, on which was ac:umulated vegetable matter whichaas been increased from time toAiR's rgg qgw j has a crust suffi:iently strong and ripb to proguppine corn, though it has to be pul,ivated by hand, as it is not strongmnough lo bear the weight of ahorse. While harvesting, ,hsield-hands catch great strings ofis by punching a hole throughihe earth. A person rising on:hiseel and coming down suddenlyse p the growing corn shakell around him. 4ny one #vjigte strength to drive a railtroughi this crust will find onreleasing- it that it will disappearsitogether. The whole section of:ountry srrounding this fieldgives evidence of mnarsbiness, andthe least rain produces an sabunjance of mud.. . But the .question:omes up: Ras not this body an outetot? Although brackish, the wa.tertastes as if fresh, and is evidentlymot stagnant. Yet these fish areyeless and scalsless-similar -tothose found in caves.Canon City gained sudden importance three or fou*r years agois a fitting-out point for L,eadrle, but tbe advent of the railway took much of this trade away,bough it is still a supply pointfor Silver Cliff and some otherpoints in that direction. It islistinctively Southern with Mexi:an peculiarities. Many of itsouses are of adobe, one storyih and altogether it is not arery imposing or prepossessingppearing pjace. But it has a.ne climate, and instead of b>eingurrounded by mines is in themidst of the grazing or stockraising region. Of ibhis industryI will giv you iiuuethinig in ruycext letter. SPuT.The welfare of each .one is soconnected with the welfare of allthat no absolute independence ispossible. Re who fancies thatsimply to mind his own business,and let otheris alone, is all that isdue to -himself or them, makes agrievous mistake, for which inhis future experisace he willhave to pay-the penalty.UR FREE EDUCATION. tlGreenville News.V'Our esteemed cotemporaries Fthe Newberry HERALD, Columbia aRegister and Winnsboro' Newsand Herald are buring figures and;'deductions at each other withawe-inspiring recklessness in a aldiscussion of the ptblic schoolquestion, the HRALD claiming rthat we have too little publicschool for our money, and thefull v lg for what we pay. searing somewbat on the same subject ais a brief essay published by ouresteemed Cha1rleston eat ebm.',rarygon the State Univeisity, begin.niog thus: dit is, we believe, Prof. uxleyrhp ba sopewheie spid that thetrue idea of popular education is aladder of which one end is in thegutter, the other in the universi- tty. The figure is a true one; for T$ ladder leidp PI1 Pply pp hut gdown. By the ladder of educa- Otion not only may the worthy andambitious mount from the lhwest -to the highest round, but the in.fluences of elevation and of aspi.ration are transmitted, unbroken, tifromn the top to the bottom.'411 of this may eo a p?itteqwithout danger, - or violence toany conscience. The question forSouth Carolina just now, however,is how best to apply the fundsshe has, which %re insuffi,4,pp p b0i- the whole of Profeesor Huxley's :izder. Is itbetter to plant it firmly in-.A Igutter snd build it upward slowly ti- but substantially. and firmly, or to albegin at the top and build down? ofOuir esteemed pharlepton cptp 4porary 'opposes an imaginary ar- wgument against higher public ed. rcucation in general, and shuns the Vireal living question which is one Lof present expediency. - itAccording to the Winnsboro' CBerald, In Salifornta eaon obild of tithe school population has for its Teducation in the school fund $17, 11in Connecticut $10, in Illinois $8, e:in lowa $9, in Kansas $6, in lii##ine $5, in Maryland 86, in aiMassachusetts $14, in Mitesota hi$5, in Nevadaa $23, and in South hiCarolina, with a larger percen- setage of ignorane- .nd poverty cothan any of them, $1.36. diapiece was the amount available wlast year to teel t:... d1ben of fe$bis State to read and write ;or Ctaking the actual school atten- ocdance of 133,458, each child at- Ctending our public schools had heabout $265 to pay for its sission's tischooling. With these figures, ogwhich would be ridiculous if they niwere not mnous'nful, staring us in aIthe face, how- can we have the feconscience to spend twenty thou- Asand dollars for higher education, hiespecially when that education is etto beP pQ bigher than that~ whiph Cis given by half a dozen institu- a'tions in the State, built up by the or,toil and money of the people, and bedestined to be overthrqwn by this seUniversity ? The claim that it titwill be so faT above our denomi. pinational institutions as to be be- d<syond competition with t,hem is p<disproved by the election of the isPresident of one of those very winstituorias to its President's zachair. itWhat our esteemed Charlestoncotemporary and its friends real- Itly propose to do, is to build a n<piece of Professor Hosley's lad- padier too short to reach the top, iand t,oo high to reach the bottom, 04and leave it. swinging in mid air, h<scorned by th6 high, beyond the tilowly, and a hindrance and eye- usore to every body. at-Such an idea comes appropri. slately from the newspaper which ciprints this, which appeared in tbeUniversity essay of our esteemed oiyesterday :'It must not be fo'rgott,an that plan every moral and iuteilectual blmovement the vitalizing force beworks from above downward.' IThis declares all sacred and pro- ftfane history a lie. Christianity, u'a moral and intellectual move- aiment,' worked from tife manger, oithe carpenter's shop and the jefishing boats up ; the reformation,a moral and intellectual movement worked from Luther, an oh- itsare pr,est. up through the neonle:be overthrow of the English Srts came from among the brewe%ts and currier's stained han<rance rose against her Kitad Nobles with the impulse frie gutters ; the revolutiont76 took from among tho coainers and caulkers in Bbatad Patrick Henry, the Virginirmer, breathed life into it ; tivolutiun of 1876 was bornie small farm houses of tto--nuQt aq Qng g t Wpalovgted plqqa.The fact is the common pcolre the first to feel wrong, aSfirst to resent it, havingreat possessions to make themid and .slothful, and no titions to make them couseryp1 qa4 the great }qvemeptuie world come from theherefore the necessity for puing and lighting the sourceAiose movements is the greathat purification and light is bivep by teaching every childvery obscure hut to read and lear himself, that when he does t-for he will act-he may do itlligently.We can not give that parifion aid light for $2.6l a yete can not aford $20,00,0 foniversity.Fos TE H>ALLIFroms thme "Far West.".ITD1., SMIT C9.,T A$Mssas. EDITORS: For some tihave thought that my friends aie nmerous readers of the HaAwould hear ikm we, but truly "p1stination is the thief of tim.bo4; pin; pogn;p have eapee4 sEe arrived in Smith Co. Texas. (ute here was the Chickasaw Rona Atlanta, Chattanooga, Mempiittle Rock, &c. The trip was mia little less than four days. Smounty occupies nearly a centralon in wnat is known as Eastkexas. It dates its settlement fr346, at which time there was iweeding twenty families withinnits. As to timber, while therei abundance, I do not goosidereavily timbered, consisting of ookory, walnut and some pine. 'il here is what a Carolinipn wol11 very fertile, about three feetpth, but the Texans call fartirest on thie prairies $1he rioi4 laibere the soil' is from seven toSt in depth. The W4ter in taunty is plentiful and I think impare favorably with Newbe,muty, S. C. From what I hiard of the water over the Statiink that very few Counties, if a'ual Smith County. There areeroius sprins of pqre freestone Witid by diggiog from twenty to foet deep you can obtain good witlm'ost every one uses well water.ire not discovered any differencee climate here from 4lge of Solglijna. T?he fr4it l4ere is very gd4 ala4ost every fari 1has oq itchard. An abundanne of frqit I~en shipped froa; $Iis County ieaon. Land can be bought frro to five dollars per acre, unioved, and improved from five to>llars per acre. We have found iople hospitable, social and kind.here, as I think it shoqld lbe eyehere, ;14at a pap's twoney does Iske him stand high in society, 1is his principles.Tbe crops all over the State are fiis said that corn can ho engaj~w in Western Texas at twenty ceir bushel. It is thought we 1ike from twenty to thirty bustupland. I think if no disasippen to cotton it will average ab~relve hundrcd pounds per aere, aithout a single ounce of manureay kind. Texans know nothlont the practicable use of commal fertilisers.Messrs. Editors, judging from sothe letters we have received, I thiwe of our frieuds think we areeased with our ne~w Western hoec whenever I think that I cannot:Lter in' Texas than in South Carolfor one will not be ashamed tomud naaking my way baok to myother State and County, feelingied that I would be -received apen arms, but until then I shallntent to remain in Texas.Hoping that good men mayleeted throughout the State, I eliThe Hzuw.n makes its weeklya regularly with but few exoepticE. J. LAKELu. FOR THE HERALD.irs' NEW YORK FASHIONS.Is ;ig all Iaterials-owsred Woaa-Velns)wIof Should you desire to -stablishrd- your claims as a lady of fashion,invest forthwith n asontache em.au broidered dress, possessed ofwbih, not even your noxt 4opq1 neighbor can controvert your position. If you act promptly too,Pt .rP ay feel yougsoff on an equal.i.y with We most advanced New>le York styles, for as yet these nov.nd elties are not seen upon theno streets, but in the wholesale re3n positories of leading importersra- preparatory to a display on retailcounters for top benefnt of thefashionable, who now begin to rem. torn from country resorts. As ari- writer on clothes philosophy' Iof was admitted to an inner view ofer. the stock at Lord & Taylor's $no5t can tigs 1Lci yp. wbat is to bo.The new embroidery is not open,rn but consists usually of patternsformed of narrow sontache braidn- or sometimes heavy stitching. Ingeneral the colors are identicalwith the material 4casapp, pn"j d's aj, sqLin 6nished cloth, etc.,).' but again we see harmoniousr a sbadings with the addition per.haps of velvet put on in applique.Often the entire front breadth isadorned with embroidery butthere are embroidered bends puioa in v4;9u wys. Then thereme are woo's wyer~ the low er skirtnd consists of wide flounces woven inL boldro. FLORAL PAT'RNP""" ,lie th oplQngi?e +a of glaii.e oods. Here of course there is nclur embri etut -these dresses arete, not very bright because the cotis, orings have a chine like indis.de tinctness. But,bright woven wooleith are a feature ; some showing pro.i- nogpced desigue W.49e lqrge3rn fruits look luscious among an.)m tumn tinted leaves. These flow.iot ered wools will for the most partits be made up as polonaises withis plain underskirte. In the. upit boiste{y 4ep4r4rnlt 'of the samek, firm, I observe full lines of Fash.'he ion. Drapery cloth which dar.ild ing the summer at wateringin places has been in favor withier ladies who embroidered it fprid, tibig copys, ingibreq4ins, etc., and~en now that autuqan has come, se.aim lect it as an adornment for manyrill al'sionable apartment. Comingry .in all the new. solid colors thisye stylish material closely resemblesI plush but is much more moderate17, in price since though~ gi$y-twou- jng4ps in width it is sold for nineBr, ty cents a b ard. It is used nott7 only for all upholstery purposeser. but even se a covering for wallsI entire roora heing lined with it.in The lopg, milky looking nap con.~tlh ens the joints and in unbroken3e, expafnse it stretekes with excelan lent e@ect,FMITN GOODS,Satin will still be fashionablea despite the coming up of wide0. repped and gros gr'ain silks whilebe velvet is of extreme importance.SEspecially in demand comes non.Spareil -velveteen whioh now that-it admirable qualities have beentried is more than ever sought afUtter. it has every quality pecu.liar to fine grades of Lyons velvetwbile the cost is mnuch less as ited raniges from one to two do'iars,iper yard. Handsome costumeslmare made entirely of it or it isercombined with other rich goodstas for example in two elegant imadported toilettes; one ruby, theofother olive green : the former olgnonpareil velveteen united with-satin; the latter with velveteenr.skirt laid in plaits and having aecoat shaped polonaise~ of satinuk finished cloth. But be sure youiot see nonpareil velveteen stamped-on the wrong side of every sec.do ond yard as otberwise you mayins be imposed upon by a counterfeit.Dld MILLINEEY.as. Leaders of fashion for a monthith past have worn turbans of feathbe era or straw turbans trimimedwith feathers. Now come widebeB brimmed straws with crowns coySered with velvet to which addios. tions of birds, ostrich plumes, etc.w,. be ae while ater- mrawillbe seen felt hats in all extensionof brim and colors to matcldresses. Capotes seem gifted wittnine lives and through change& vtime fatal to all other style shoafront once more. But row become larger and often the fronigrown to the dignity of a coronetBirds upQn birds lie ready fo:40. Many little ones crowde<together on a hat or very largsingle ones,LUCY CARTERA GOOD STONY OF STE.RP ENS AND TOOMBS. 'A doctor named Rolystu. suedPeter Bennet for I:is bill for attendng the wife of the latter. AlexandeH. Stephens was on the Bennett sideand Robert Toombs, then Senator othe United States, was for Dr. '!oyston. The Doctor proved~she ngmbeiof his vis ta, 4beir yalte acccrding tilp* ga atom, uad his own eshority tcdo medical practice. Mr. Stephentold his client that the physician hacmade out his case, and the only thingleft to do was to pay it. 'No,' e4icPeter, 'I hired Tog speak in m:case, u4 go spek.'Mr. Stephens told him there wainothing to ay ; he bd looked on tisee that it was made out, and iwas.'Peter was obstinate, and at lasMr. Stephens told him to taake ispeech bimszl, i4 ke thought on9,214 be Pade.'1 will,' said Peter Bennett, iBobby Toombs will fQt e too harion me.'o To.mb* promised, and Pe4er began'Qeutlemen of the jury-You andis plain farmers, aud if we don't sticltogether, these 'ere lawyers and 'doctors will git the advantage of us.ain't no obj ftions--to -theni U-helproper place; bt-they tiq'; fsrmeregeulegRr p.4 t4e jyyy.''ow this man Royston was a neldoctor, and I went for him tcome an' to doctor my wife's worleg. And he come an' put somsalve truck onto it and some rasp, bwnever 4one j4 pge hIt of good, gentlemen of the jury. I don't believe b,is no doctor, no way. There is doetore as is - doctors sure enough, bnthis man don't earn his money ; aniif you send for hiap, a Mrs. Saral4!kijsou did, for a negro boy as waworth $4,000 ho just kills him amwants pay for it,''I don't/' thundered the doctor.'D)id you cure him?'.asked Peterwith the low accents of a judge witia black cap on.The 4qgtor was slent, and Peteproceeded:'As I was sayin', gentlemen of thjury, we farmers, when we sell oncotton, has got to give vally for-th~money we ask, and doctors ain't nontoo good to he put to the same ruleAnd I don't believe this Sam Roystoiis no doctor, no how.'The physician again put in his oarwith 'Look at my diploma if yotthink I am no doctor.''His diploma!l' exclaimed the ne,fledged orator, with great contempt'His diploma ! Gentlemen, that isbig word for printed sheepskins, anmit didn't make no doctor of the sheas first e.wore it, nor does it of theman as now carries it, and I p'int onto .ye that ho ain't no doctor at all.'The man of medicine was now infury, .and screamed out, 'Ask my patients if I am not a doctor!l''I asked my wife,' retorted Peter'au' she said as how she thought yotwasn't.''Ask my other patients,' said DrRoyason.This seemed to be the straw thabroke the camel's back, for Peter replied with a look and toue of unutterable sadness :'That is a hard-.sayin', gentlemen cthe jury, and one that requires me t,die or to have powers as I'v bearn telceased to be exercised since the Apostles. Does he expect me to bring thAngel of Gabriel down to toot hihorn before the time and cry aloud'Awake ye dead, and tell this corand jury your opinion of Royston'practice ?' Am I to go to the tomn1and say to uam as is at last at rest frotphysic and doctor bills, 'Git up herEyou, and state if you died anaturideath, or was hurricd up some b;-doctors?' He says afk h -,atientaand, gentlemen of the jury, they arall dead*f Where is Mrs. Besley'an Sam ? Gh-s4et wormsin thgraveyard where he lies. Mr. :Pwoman Sarah wasttended'by himso('her funeral was spp'inted, and hr"I had the corpse ready. Where is thst'likely Bill'as belonged to Mr. Mitc- ell? Now in glory an' expressin' hopinion on Royston's doetorii.Where is that baby gal of Hsrry Sfe-$phens' ? She are where doctors -I from tronblin and the infants are atrest.'Gentlemen of the jury, he has eat .ehick',es enough at my how e to paysfor his. salve, and..I fur ished tbt:>rags, and I don't suppose he chsfor Makin' of her worse, aid even hedon't pretend to charge f.,r curia' of,her, and- I am huaibly thankful thathe never gave her nothin' for Ler.inw9rda, as he did his other ratienfsfor sometbin' made 'em all die mightsudden'- -Here the applause made the speksit down in great confusion, and i:spite of a logical restatement of theease by Senator Toombs. the doctorlost and Peter Bennett won.A CineUs CLOWN'S SZsroNThe Occident publisbes the following,as the searahiug sermos of a c'eelown, said to have been-delivered recently at the close of the usual ringperformance in a crowded tent in Virginia: 'We have taken in $600 eto-day--more than most ministers othe gospel receite for a whole yeare service. A large portion of this audineeis made up of members of the ehureb.And yet, when.your preacher asks youto aid him in supporting theyou are too poor to give anytingBut you come here and pay do ato hear e talk nonsense. I am afool becaqse I am paid for it;Imakemy living by it. You professtobwise, and yet you support, me:aiyfolly. Now, isn't this a prattyfor Christians to be in 7 ...list YoUfeel ashamed of' yourselves? Yoought to.'CULTIVATZ A SwsET Vo!c. -There is no power of love soato get and keep as a kind voice.A kind hand is deaf and dumb.It may be rough in flesh andblood, yet do the work of a softheart, apd.do it with a soft touch.But there is no one thing thatlove so mnch needs as a-sweet ,voice to tell what it mes aand feels, and it is b : toget it and keep it in the Iitsbtone. One must start in youth,anid be on the watch nightand day, at work and play,to got and keep a voica thatshall speak .at all times the -thought of a kind heart. Bat thisis the time when a sharp voice ismost apt .to be got. You oftenhear boys and girls say words atplay with a quick sharp tone, as ifit were the snap of a whip. Whemdone of them gets vexed you wilbear a voice that sounds as if tswere made up of a snarl, a whineand a bark. Such a voice often'speaks worse than the heart feels.1It shows more ill-will in the tonethan in the words. It is often in ..mirth that one getseavoice ora,tone that is sharp, and sticks tohim through life, and stirs up illwill and grief, tnd falls like a dropof gall on the sweet joys at home.Such as these get a sharp bomevoice for use and keep their bestvoice for those they meet elsewhere, just as they would savetheir best cakes and pies forguests and all theiu soar food for -their own board. I would say toall boys and girls, 'Use your ~guests voice at home.' Watch itby day as a pearl of great price,for it will be worth more to you inthe days to come tban the best 'pearl hid in the sea. A kindvoice is a lark's song to a hearthand home. It is to the heart' whatlight is to the eye.Jewihfessenger.*IIf a man should send to me to!come a hundred miles to visit him,Sand should set before me a basketsof flue summer fruit, I shouldthink there was some proportion'between the labor and the reward.The beginning ohardship islike the first tasteof bitterfoods-.- 'it seems for a moment nnbeara, .-k ; yet if there is nothing .i:1 satisfy our hunger, weB'ther bii and tnd.i